Australia: PM orders inquiry into juvenile prison abuse

CCTV footage from the Don Dale Youth Detention Centre shows a boy hooded and strapped to a mechanical chair [EPA]

Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has ordered an inquiry into the treatment of children in detention after the airing of videos showing prison guards tear-gassing teenage inmates and strapping a half-naked, hooded-boy to a chair.

Footage of the abuse of six aboriginal boys in a juvenile detention centre sparked renewed criticism of Australia's treatment of Aborigines and their high imprisonment rate.

The Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) aired CCTV footage late on Monday of boys in a Northern Territory juvenile detention centre being stripped naked and held for long periods in solitary confinement.

Aboriginals feel ignored by Australian government

The CCTV video also showed guards mocking inmates, carrying a boy by the neck and throwing him on to a mattress in a cell, and covering a teenager's head with a hood and shackling him to a chair with neck, arm, leg and foot restraints.

"Like all Australians, I've been deeply shocked - shocked and appalled by the images of mistreatment of children," Turnbull said on ABC radio on Tuesday as he announced a Royal Commission, Australia's most powerful state-sanctioned inquiry.

The CCTV footage from the Don Dale Youth Detention Centre in Darwin was shot between 2010 and 2014.

A lawyer representing two of the boys told the Reuters news agency all six boys abused were of aboriginal descent - Aborigines make up the majority of the Northern Territory population and 94 percent of juvenile inmates in the territory.

Lawyer Peter O'Brien said he was suing the state on behalf of the two young aboriginal men, alleging assault, battery and false imprisonment.

"It seems as if this abuse is built into the very core of the system," he said in a statement, calling for the immediate release of one of his clients, who is now in an adult prison, and all children imprisoned in the Northern Territory.

"Our (indigenous) people have known about things like this ... and to just see it laid bare in front of us last night must be a wake-up call to everyone in Australia - that something's got to be done about the way we lock our people up in this country, and particularly the way we lock our kids up," an emotional Gooda, who is an Aboriginal, told reporters.

A report into some of the incidents by the Northern Territory Children's Commissioner in 2015 found fault with the guards' behaviour, but the findings were disputed by the then head of prisons and not acted upon, said the ABC.

Northern Territory Chief Minister Adam Giles sacked his corrections minister within hours of the broadcast and said that information about the abuse had been withheld from him, blaming a "culture of cover-up" within the corrections system.

Some Aborigines in the territory called for Giles to be removed. A coalition of Northern Territory Aboriginal organisations called for the national government to dissolve the territory government, which it has the authority to do.

"Any government that enacts policies designed to harm children and enables a culture of brutalisation and cover-ups, surrenders its right to govern," spokesman John Paterson told Reuters.

'Excessive use of force'

Residents in Alice Springs staged a peaceful protest against the abuse of children in detention, while the ABC reported that at least eight people were protesting on the roof of a prison in the town. Al Jazeera could not independently confirm the prison protest.

"Excessive use of force, isolation and shackling of children is barbaric and inhumane," Human Rights Watch Australia Director Elaine Pearson told Reuters.

The ABC reported that only two detention staff members identified in the footage remained within the youth justice system.

Indigenous young people aged 10-17 were 17 times as likely to be under Australia's youth justice supervision, according to data gathered by Reuters. They were 28 times as likely to be detained.

Australia's Human Rights Commission president Gillian Triggs, who backed the inquiry, said: "We have been reporting on this question of indigenous incarceration, particularly of juveniles, for many, many years and we have had many, many reports ... on the appalling conditions in which they are held."

Aborigines comprise just 3 percent of Australia's population but make up 27 percent of those in prison.